pyat: (Default)
pyat ([personal profile] pyat) wrote2009-05-03 12:49 pm

Pyat don't feel so good.

So, after a very broken sleep, I arose to a matched pair of very swollen (and tender) lymph nodes on the back of my neck. For those who were visiting last night, I am still hiccuping, 9 or 10 times a minute. Each time I do, my neck tenses up, and gives the swollen nodes a swift kick.


Of course, it could be worse. I could be [livejournal.com profile] wggthegnoll, in hospital with appendicitis, and apparently the Four Horsemen are his housemates.

[identity profile] redregon.livejournal.com 2009-05-03 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
hehehee, i'm loving his expression in this photo! :P

[identity profile] catsarah.livejournal.com 2009-05-03 07:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm thinking it's time to go to the ER hon. Not sure if hiccups are associated with anything serious, but the lymph nodes combined might mean something...

[identity profile] mrs-dm.livejournal.com 2009-05-03 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
okay, I think I can spot "Famine" and "War" on either end, but of the two in the middle, which is "Pestilence" and which is "Death"?

[identity profile] mrs-dm.livejournal.com 2009-05-04 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
Piet, I posted this comment to velvetpage, but also am copying it to you, as you may find it useful:

I've found a sure way to stop (myself) from hiccuping. But it's hard to describe. It's related to Chi'Kung breathing that I learned in Tai Chi, a kind of diaphragmatic breathing. Afterall, hiccups are really involuntary spasms of the diaphragm. It took a couple of years to learn, but there's a quicker way to do diaphragmatic breathing (and so gain control of your diaphragm instead of it spasming).

Sit in a chair, and place your hands on your back at the base of your ribcage. Then bend over at your waist (still sitting). Try breathing in and out. In this position, your rib cage is more or less immobilized and you will feel your hands move out and in as you breath via your diaphragm instead. Focus on gaining voluntary control over this breathing.

Also good for panic symptoms. I used to teach it to my patients.

Farewell, young grasshopper!